Puerto Rico confronts massive public debt and must somehow dig its economy out of a deep crisis.
Unfortunately, as Julian Vasquez Heilig shows, a bill has been proposed to the legislature to save money by privatizing public education.
Heilig writes:
“Politicians in Puerto Rico are seeking to solve decades of fiscal mismanagement by adopting the same education reforms that are hurting children and starving school districts in the mainland United States. The disaster capitalism coming to the azure waters of Puerto Rico is very similar to the school privatization and private-control education reform causing an uproar in Chicago and Detroit….
“In October, Senator Eduardo Bhatia fast-tracked Project 1456 in the Puerto Rican Senate. School closure requirements in 1456 are the first notable parallel with the Detroit and Chicago school privatization playbook. In Chicago, 50 schools (primarily in African-American neighborhoods) were recently closed under the pretext that they were under-enrolled. A University of Chicago study showed that after neighborhood school closure, students were shuffled to a new set of low-performing schools— often charter schools…
Since 2014, the Puerto Rican government has closed 135 schools— about 10% of the schools on the island. The results of these school closings are class sizes as large as 40 students. The new law requires the closure of 400 more public schools—30% of the remaining public schools on the island. Additionally, Project 1456 requires that the government turn at least 15% of schools into Lider (charter schools) every three years under the auspices of private control and the education authority….
“While many in the mainland United States argue that charter schools are public schools— this bill makes it clear that Lider schools are public schools in name only. The bill amends Puerto Rico’s 1951 pension law by explicitly stating that charter school teachers are not public employees. As a result, they will not have access to the public pension retirement system….
“The privatization of Puerto Rico’s schools is a way to address the tens of billions of dollars in debt that Puerto Rican politicians have accrued over the past several decades. Will Puerto Rico satiate their addiction to debt on the backs of impoverished children? The answer hinges on the passage of 1456.”
– See more at: http://www.progressive.org/news/2015/11/188428/puerto-ricos-school-crisis#.dpuf

Do charter schools in Puerto Rico hire TFA corp members? Why would a career teacher want to teach in a charter school with no pension benefit?
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I decided to look up whether or not Puerto Rico pays into social security or has their own thing, and found this to be somewhat insightful. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taxation_in_Puerto_Rico
I don’t know what the difference between a state pension and social security is on the mainland – as well as Puerto Rico, but I can say that there is a serious disparity in benefits between state side and PR. It’s disheartening.
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Also, as much as I bet that TFA is salivating over PR privatization, I don’t think they have enough people who could speak the language. They certainly can’t fly in whitepeople like it’s SOP. TFA would have to supplement income to anyone brave enough to go.
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What can we say? Hedge funds are vampire bats sucking the life out of their victims.
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